Monday, May 28, 2012

Web Sites - Four Practical Steps to a Website Redesign : MarketingProfs Article

Web Sites - Four Practical Steps to a Website Redesign : MarketingProfs Article

Benchmark your current metrics. First, get a clear picture of your site's performance history. Assess factors such as:
  • Number of visits/visitors/unique visitors
  • Number of new leads/form submissions
  • Total amount of sales generated
Inventory your assets—and protect them. Once you know what site features are winners, make sure you don't lose them in a redesign! Think it through. "For example, if you remove a page that has a higher number of inbound links, you could lose a lot of SEO credit, which could decrease keyword rankings," Meher writes.
Design your site around personas. Create fictional representations of your ideal customers—and craft your content around those personas. To build buyer personas:
  • Segment by demographics. Give each buyer type a name, job title, company, etc.
  • Identify their needs. What problems are these personas trying to solve? What do they need from you?
  • Develop behavior-based profiles. Are they active on Facebook, Twitter? What search terms do they use? How do they use your products?
Build in calls to action. Create relevant calls to action at your site, based on the personas you've developed. Offer product demos, free trials, or start a contest.
The Po!nt: Fresh starts create new options. Done well, a site redesign can open up great new opportunities for engaging prospects and clients alike. Are you game?


Read more: http://www.marketingprofs.com/short-articles/2577/four-practical-steps-to-a-website-redesign#ixzz1wCkpvChR

Five Tips for Successful Engagement With Online Video | MarketingProfs Daily Fix Blog

Five Tips for Successful Engagement With Online Video | MarketingProfs Daily Fix Blog

When consumers shop online, they expect to receive the same personalized attention they get in-store, with engaging experiences throughout their decision-making process. To create those engaging online experiences, innovative marketers are turning to online video.
Interested in maximizing your brand’s success with online video? Here are five thoughts to consider.
1. Search engines favor video and structure their results to reward sites that use it
Consequently, online marketers are investing more to promote their videos. One investment that goes a long way towards attracting higher-quality visitors is making on-site videos scalable. That ensures reach for long-tail keywords, which drive the highest-quality traffic and best conversion rates.
2. Pre-roll ads bring your prospects back
The average consumer interacts with your brand several times before conversion. An effective way to bring site “abandoners” back and recover lost traffic is with retargeted ads designed to re-engage abandoners based on their previous behavior on your website.
New online video technology advances retargeted advertising by presenting abandoners with personalized pre-roll ads based on their shopping history and relevant deals. Retargeted pre-roll ads outperform traditional retargeted banner ads with higher conversion rates and often with above-average order value, leading to a significant return on ad spend.
3. On-site video increases conversion rates
When videos are properly produced, they captivate users. Video availability also enhances credibility and improves visitors’ impressions of the website, even among folks who do not view them.
New smart video technology enhances the potential of on-site videos even more by generating videos in real time. As price, seasonal deals, and last-minute offers change, product videos are created on the fly to overcome the challenges of manual video production. The result is a richer and more engaging shopping experience with higher conversion rates.
4. Online video can be an effective customer service tool
A company’s ability to retain customers depends largely on the quality of service throughout the customers’ lifetime with the brand. Use video for product demonstrations, to provide order and provisioning status, or to deliver complex bills, statements, and invoices with an easily digestible explanation of usage and fees. Companies pursuing this approach have customers who make more informed decisions and less calls to the contact center, which results in lower support costs, greater trust and credibility, and higher customer satisfaction.
5. Online video makes for more impactful nurturing campaigns
The effectiveness of email campaigns, newsletters, loyalty programs, and customer portals can be enhanced with personalized offerings that resonate based on profile, shopping history, and browsing trail.
Personalized video helps nurture, upsell, and retain existing customers. The open rate for video newsletters, for example, is two to three times higher than it is for text. Personalized video newsletters can include a greeting with the recipient’s name and display promotional offerings based on browsing history, geography, or preference segmentation.
These five applications of online video bridge the gap between live and virtual experiences for the consumer. Plus, they offer the most streamlined way to present information in all your customers’ touch points with your brand.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Sales - How Personas Can Lead Your Messaging Astray (and Four Tips for Keeping It on Track) : MarketingProfs Article

Sales - How Personas Can Lead Your Messaging Astray (and Four Tips for Keeping It on Track) : MarketingProfs Article

Do you think a prospect relates and responds better to your marketing message because you've based it on a customer persona?
If you are like many marketers, you have created fictional characters—personas—with names, demographic attributes, attitudes, and behaviors to help frame and target your messages.
But is your prospect's persona what drives the way she responds to your messages? Is she buying something merely because of who she is? Are shared or similar personal and professional characteristics what cause customers to rethink their current approach and consider your "new way" to solve their problems? Unfortunately, that is far from the reality of why customers buy. Focusing your messaging on personas may, therefore, actually lead your messaging astray.
Status Quo Profiles: A New Messaging Starting Point
The biggest factors that determine whether prospects will respond to your messages are whether they believe their status quo is at risk and whether they are convinced they need to do something different. The fact is... those factors have little to do with demographics and attitudes.
The most overlooked design point for customer messaging is a "status quo profile." You needn't focus your messaging on your prospect's title, segment, or persona. Instead, you've got to make prospects realize that their current approach is so limiting that it puts their objectives or desired outcomes at risk.
To craft effective messaging, first answer the following four questions.
1. How are prospects addressing the challenges your product or service can solve today?
Even before they come across your company and solution, your prospects think they are already doing something to solve their problems and meet their business needs. So, to change their perception, you need a precise understanding of what your potential customers are currently doing to solve their problems.
Your messaging will have to take aim at dislodging an incumbent, so knowing your opponent is essential.
2. Why do prospects think their current product or service is great?
Remember, prospects live in their story—not yours. Prospects were doing something a certain way before they chose the way they are doing it today, and they assume they already have a better solution than the one they had before. Therefore, chances are you are sending messages to people who do not think they have a problem. Or, at least, they still remember the benefits they based their last decision on, and assume they are still getting that same value.
3. What issues, challenges, threats, risks, or missed opportunities have surfaced since prospects purchased their current solution or implemented their current approach?
Remember, not everyone is a prospect for your solution. Your prospects are those who have a certain "installed" approach that can cause limitations because of a changing business environment.
You need to focus on the ripest opportunities for change, so document the things that are changing in your prospect's industry, including changes in environment, competitive space, the global marketplace, or anything that the current approach may not have taken into account, or is ill-equipped to handle.
4. What oversights in your prospects' current approach will keep them from avoiding potential problems or capitalizing on new opportunities?
When you present challenges to prospects, they will first react by seeing whether their current approach or solution can be "stretched" to overcome the challenges you identify. Therefore, you will have to identify and amplify clear omissions in their current approach that will prohibit them from resolving those obstacles. Those gaps need to lead to your unique strengths or capabilities.
Creating gaps that are too wide to cross via a prospect's current solution—their status quo—is essential for crafting messages that will compel prospects to change.
* * *
By answering those four questions and using them as the basis for the messages you craft for your content marketing campaigns, you will significantly improve your ability to move prospects to consider change—and to choose you.
Compare results from this approach with the results you achieve via a persona-based approach, and you will see a significant difference in the relevance and impact of your customer conversations.


Read more: http://www.marketingprofs.com/articles/2012/7906/how-personas-can-lead-your-messaging-astray-and-four-tips-for-keeping-it-on-track#ixzz1vYQ2tcRh

Writing - Why You Might Need a Brand Journalist to Tell Your Story : MarketingProfs Article

Writing - Why You Might Need a Brand Journalist to Tell Your Story : MarketingProfs Article

Telling ordinary, made-up stories isn't what makes your content marketing engaging for your customers and would-be customers. What matters is telling interesting true stories that help your audience understand your product, service, or business. So, to help your company unearth real-life stories from within your organization, consider hiring a brand journalist.
"A brand journalist or corporate reporter works inside the company, writing and producing videos, blog posts, photos, webinars, charts, graphs, e-books, podcasts, and other information that delivers value to your marketplace," explains Ann Handley, chief content officer at MarketingProfs, in her Daily Fix blog post titled "Seven Reasons Your Content Marketing Needs a Brand Journalist."
So why might you hire a brand journalist for your business? Here are three reasons, based on Handley's post.
Brand journalists recognize good stories. Journalists are trained to sift through massive amounts of information and separate the stories that people want to hear. As Handley puts it, "Their innate understanding of audience means that every time they sit down at their desk to create content, there's always a little voice in the back of their head reminding them, 'Nobody has to read this.'"
Brand journalists know how to simplify. Journalists not only spot engaging stories but also know how to make them easily digestible, even if the subject matter is weighty or complex. "Journalists excel in deconstructing the complex to make it easily understood," says Handley. A brand journalist can rise to the challenge of telling engaging stories about unruly topics, highly regulated industries, and seemingly dull products.
Brand journalists rely on facts. When you hire a brand journalist, you are choosing to produce content that goes beyond marketing copy or collateral. "Journalists are trained in backing up opinions and assertions with research and facts, and attributing ideas to proper sources," reminds Handley. "That enhances your credibility as a voice in your industry."
The Po!nt: Consider hiring a brand journalist to produce fact-based stories and other content that both attract and engage—and do so credibly, while elevating your credibility.


Read more: http://www.marketingprofs.com/short-articles/2584/why-you-might-need-a-brand-journalist-to-tell-your-story#ixzz1vYPKfzED

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Win the Pitch: Tips from Mastercard's "Priceless" Pitchman - Kevin Allen - Harvard Business Review

Win the Pitch: Tips from Mastercard's "Priceless" Pitchman - Kevin Allen - Harvard Business Review

As a growth officer in my early career with the mad men and women of McCann Ericksson, my mom could never quite grasp what I did for a living. But, when we pitched, won and delivered the phenomenon now globally known as Priceless for MasterCard, she could finally brag to her friends at my Aunt Rose's kitchen table. From the moment the very first television commercial appeared (You remember it, right? "Two tickets: $28. Two hot dogs, two popcorns, two sodas: $18. One autographed baseball: $45. Real conversation with 11-year-old son: Priceless."), Mom told practically anyone who would listen that I wrote and executed the entire campaign single-handedly. My role, in fact (promise not to tell her) was that of the Pitchman.
In one of the industry's most hotly-contested advertising accounts, dozens of agencies' pitches were winnowed down to two contenders. In a surprising twist, MasterCard declared that the agency with the highest score in consumer testing would win. The heart-wrenching result: Our Pricelesscampaign did not test well. In an act of courage, and confidence, the MasterCard team awarded us the business anyway. When I asked Larry Flanagan, who went on to become MasterCard's celebrated CMO, about their decision to award us the business for the Priceless campaign, he said, "We bonded because McCann Eriksson understood the deep desire of the MasterCard customer, but they understood MasterCard's deep desire, too."
We all make pitches every day — for that highly-prized account; to a client who's reluctant to accept your scary proposal; for a skeptical CFO to loosen the purse strings; or for a wary new team to believe in you. Here's what I've learned about winning pitches like these:
1. You need to understand that behind every decision lies a hidden agenda.
There are no magic tricks or hypnotics to persuade people to do what you say. Rather, behind every decision the average person makes to buy something — whether a product or service, your argument or an idea — is an unspoken emotional motivation. I call this the hidden agenda. Tap this, connect to it — and you will have people saying yes.
2. You need to do your emotional homework to find the hidden agenda.
To find the hidden agenda, you need to identify your audiences' wants, needs and/or values. Too many pitches are lost because the people undertaking them think — erroneously — that the business matters at hand are the only relevant issue. Deep desires, often unspoken — like the desire to be recognized, to feel appreciated, to create something, to be admired, to lead, to feel safe and secure — are fundamental to any business decision. The business issue and the hidden agenda are intertwined.
For the MasterCard pitch, in fact, two parallel hidden agendas were at work — MasterCard's agenda, and the agenda of MasterCard customers. MasterCard's hidden agenda was a desire to finally score a victory over Visa, but there was a sense that it would be very difficult to achieve. The MasterCard customer's hidden agenda: to be good people, buying good things, for good reasons.
The-hidden-agenda.jpg
A hidden agenda falls into one of three categories:
Wants are about people viewing their circumstances through the lens of ambition and confidence. For example, when pitching to a Wall Street titan some years back, we determined the following want: "I want people to recognize me for having created a financial services powerhouse."
Needs are about viewing circumstances through the lens of fear or concern. The need we uncovered at the core of the Mastercard pitch was: We need to score a victory over Visa in the marketplace, and in doing so be famous for it... but we're not so sure we can.
Values are about people viewing the world entirely through the lens of their belief systems. The key insight that led to the development of the Priceless campaign was in the value system of our target audience, namely people who believed they were good people buying good things for good reason, and that it was not possible to put a price on things like family and life experiences.
3. You need to connect yourself to the hidden agenda.
You win the pitch when you link what I call your leverageable assets to your audience's hidden agenda. Your leverageable assets are:
Real Ambition: This is your intention to create something good where nothing existed before. In a wonderful pitch for South African Airways, the real ambition was based on a shared aspiration for a new South Africa, where South African Airways would be a proud, visible symbol of a new, diverse nation.
Your Core Abilities: These are the special abilities you possess at the core of your being that separate you from others. For those of us at McCann who were in pursuit of the MasterCard campaign, it was our fiercely competitive winners culture. As Larry Flanagan pointed out, "Yes, we honestly believed that MasterCard could win with McCann."
Your Credo: These are the values and the belief system to which you subscribe, and/or a shared behavior and code of ethics that you're working within. A good example is when Horst Schulze from Ritz Carlton summed up their credo with the following sentiment: We're Ladies and Gentleman Serving Ladies and Gentleman.
Your Real Ambition is used to connect to the your audience's Want, creating a shared vision of what the future will become. The South African Airways pitch was won on the basis of a shared ambition of presenting the airline as a symbol for what the entire nation could become. The pitch team summed up the sentiment in a short film — a photo essay of the mosaic of the new south Africa, with the strains of a beloved Thula Mtwana lullaby, all leading up to the tagline, "We're South African."
Your Credo is used to connect to the client's Values, defining a belief system that you and your client share. A pitch for Marriott International was won on the basis of a shared value system, coined, The Sprit to Serve.
Your Core Ability is used to connect to the client's Need, because you have something special that solves your client's needs. McCann won the MasterCard campaign through a collective desire and ability to win against an entrenched competitor. Key to winning was applying the core ability of McCann — an intense and renowned competitive spirit, and a philosophy that every competitor's vulnerability can be found. In fact, the very first sentiment of our presentation was a huge slide with the words Carpe Diem, and a powerful affirmation that MasterCard's DNA aligned with a profound shift toward inner-directed societal values — and that this was indeed MasterCard's moment.
4. You need to deliver like a litigator.
With this foundation, you can then create your argument, gathering all your facts and supporting evidence around the hidden agenda, which should be placed squarely at the center of your "case." Then, you can create an exciting tale where your audience attains their deepest desire, not via business-speak, but with good old-fashioned storytelling to convincingly convey your pitch.
It may seem crazy for an ad man to assert that we really don't "persuade" anybody to do anything. I believe, however, that pitches are won — and people are willing to follow you — not because you've twisted someone's arm, but because people see that you understand them, that you've applied the time and the sensitivity to do so, and that you possess a special gift that can help them reach their heart's desire. And that, my friends, is priceless.

Hunger for Online Content Remains Undiminished - eMarketer

Hunger for Online Content Remains Undiminished - eMarketer

Consumers have demonstrated a voracious appetite for online content that shows no signs of abating. In November 2011, research firm JZ Analytics conducted a survey of US internet users for semiconductor manufacturer Broadcom and found that nearly 87% of respondents consumed 11 hours or more of online content per week at their workplaces or homes, whether surfing the internet, watching online video or checking email.
Further, 54% of those polled said they consumed at least 21 hours of digital content in a given week.

Time per Week Spent Consuming Online Content According to US Internet Users, Nov 2011 (% of respondents)

Digital content consumption levels were lower for consumers on the go who used laptops, smartphones or tablets. From that group, only 31% of people said they consumed 11 or more hours of content, which makes sense given that they were likely accessing content on a smaller screen.
The immediacy and ease of streaming services continue to draw users in search of online video. According to the survey, 58% of respondents said they watched online videos on web-based streaming services that hosted user-generated content, such as YouTube. And more than one-third of respondents said they watched content on full-episode player sites, such as Hulu or Netflix.

Types of Online Video Watched by US Internet Users, Nov 2011 (% of respondents)

Broadcom also found that the majority of respondents watched videos online—in fact, more than two-thirds of those polled said they watched at least one online video a day. And about one-quarter of respondents said they watched three or more videos a day. Online video’s continuing popularity and increasing penetration reflects its emerging status as a mass-market medium, presenting new opportunities for brands to reach consumers.
eMarketer estimates spending on online video advertising—much of which supports the video content consumers are so hungry for—will reach $3.12 billion this year in the US, up 54.7% over 2011. Online video is the fastest-growing online ad format in the country, albeit from a comparatively small base.
Corporate subscribers have access to all eMarketer analyst reports, articles, data and more. Join the over 750 companies already benefiting from eMarketer’s approach. Learn more.

Restaurant - Professional Joomla 2.5 Templates, Joomla Themes, Joomla Design Shop, Modules and Free Extensions

Restaurant - Professional Joomla 2.5 Templates, Joomla Themes, Joomla Design Shop, Modules and Free Extensions
Restaurant - Restaurants, cafés, bars, pizzerias, food Joomla template

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Four Strategies for Staying Relevant - David Aaker - Harvard Business Review

Four Strategies for Staying Relevant - David Aaker - Harvard Business Review

A serious threat facing most brands in dynamic markets is the loss of relevance because the category or subcategory they are serving is declining. Customers are no longer buying what the brand is perceived to make. New categories or subcategories emerge as competitors' innovations create "must haves." This dynamic can happen even if the brand is strong; customers are loyal; and the offering has never been better, thanks to incremental innovations.
Relevance dominates. If a group of customers wants a battery powered car it does not matter how much they love your hybrid brand. It will not be relevant. A newspaper can have the best new coverage and editorial staff, but if readers are diverted to cable news or blogs, relevance will decline. The ultimate tragedy is to achieve brilliant differentiation, winning the preference battle, only to have that effort wasted as its relevance declines.
How does a brand stay relevant? How can a brand avoid the disinvest or milking decision? There are four strategies that can work.
1. Gain parity. The goal is to create a close-enough option to a competitor's "must have." Several of the fast-food brands introduced menus items like salads and fruit smoothies designed to be "good enough" for the the healthy-eating segment. McDonald's, facing a threat from Starbucks to their breakfast and other off-hours business, introduced the McCafe line, close enough with respect to coffee quality to escape exclusion by many customers.
One challenge facing the parity options is that the brand may be perceived to lack credibility in the new area. Another is that that it might be difficult to actually deliver on the promise, given that the culture, assets, and skills of the operation were not designed to support the parity initiative.
2. Leapfrog the innovation. Instead of being satisfied with being relegated to having a parity product, a firm could attempt to take over the new category or subcategory or at least to become a significant player with a substantial or transformational innovation that leapfrogs the competitor. Nike with its Nike + shoes and iPod Sensor allows a runner to hear music plus keep track of each workout. The adidas miCoach also provides a way to monitor and link each workout to a computer but it has an active forum, the ability to create a program design to fit a sport and goals, and even a contact to trainers who can design customized programs. Cisco has frequently filled gaps in its product line with an acquisition. They then added Cisco-driven synergy and systems benefits creating a leapfrog result.
The leapfrog strategy represents a formidable challenge because substantial or transformational innovation is needed and because getting established in a marketplace where a competitor likely has scale and momentum will be difficult.
3. Reposition. Modify and reposition the brand so that its value proposition becomes more relevant given the market dynamics. Madonna has had several transformations through the years to maintain her relevance. L.L. Bean, built on a heritage of hunting, fishing, and camping, repositioned itself as a broader outdoor firm relevant to the interests of outdoor enthusiasts such as hikers, mountain bikers, cross-country skiers, and water-sports enthusiasts. The outdoors was still treated with the same sense of awe, respect, and adventure but from a different perspective.
The challenge is to have enough substance to earn credibility in the new position and to implement the rebranding strategy as well. Madonna and L.L. Bean had to live the new position and provide benefits that were relevant.
4. Stick to your knitting. Rather than adapting, keep pursuing the same strategy with the same value proposition but just do it better, keep improving, and create brand energy. The safety razor, for example, was threatened in the 1930s with the introduction of the electric shaver and its compelling benefits. However, an incredible stream of innovations from Gillette allowed it to beat back the new category and enjoy robust growth. In-N-Out Burger, a chain in the western United States that has developed intense loyalty with a menu of burgers, fries, and shakes, has made no effort to adjust to the healthy trend. It simply continues to deliver the same menu with uncompromising quality, consistency, and service under the assumption that a worthwhile segment has ignored the healthy tread and another will indulge periodically.
The risk of the stick-to-your-knitting strategy is that the new category or subcategory might be based on such a strong trend or such a compelling set of benefits that avoiding it might prove futile and even disastrous.
The selection of the optimal response will be context specific, but it will involve two questions. What is size of the relevance threat and its supporting trend? And what is a realistic judgment about the firm's ability to innovate, add needed capabilities, and be successful in the marketplace? Complexities, interactions, and future uncertainties make them tough questions to answer but a loss of relevance is tougher still.

National Stationery Show Sneak Peek - Kate & Birdie | Oh So Beautiful Paper

National Stationery Show Sneak Peek - Kate & Birdie | Oh So Beautiful Paper
National Stationery Show Sneak Peek Kate Birdie 550x366 Stationery Show Sneak Peek: Kate & Birdie

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

[What Happens If] you Rub Jollibee with some Vogue Glamour | Pepper.ph

[What Happens If] you Rub Jollibee with some Vogue Glamour | Pepper.ph: COLLABORATE

Book Friday: Sea - Home Design with Kevin Sharkey

Book Friday: Sea - Home Design with Kevin Sharkey

Emperor Angel Turning
Green Sea Turtle copy

Online Paint Tools - Home Design with Kevin Sharkey

Online Paint Tools - Home Design with Kevin Sharkey

If you’re thinking about making over a room, or if you’re choosing a palette for a new room, online paint tools are a great place to start. They can give you ideas and inspiration that in-store paint samples can’t. These are a few of my favorite online paint tools at the moment.
design seedsAntiquityHues605
Design Seeds is full of color palettes taken from creator Jessica Colaluca’s daily inspirations. This site is useful if you don’t have any initial color ideas. You can search by color value or theme–like seaside, nature, poppy. Jessica creates new palettes often, so the site always has new ideas.
colour lovers
COLOURLovers is one our newest partners. The site takes images from Living and matches the correct Martha Stewart paint colors at Home Depot to the colors in the room. It’s also fun to browse the Martha palettes users have created. You can see some of our color palettes here.
home depot
Home Depot’s Home Inspiration tool lets you virtually paint walls with Home Depot paints to get a better idea of what the room will look like as a whole. When you choose the first color, it also gives you suggestions for other colors that make a great palette.
pantone moods
The Pantone mood selector helps choose keywords that describe the mood you want your room to feel, from dramatic to elegant or earthy. You can even mix and match moods–like graceful and imaginative–to create a custom mood palette.
It’s fun to play around with the programs these sites offer. If you’re not repainting a room, try matching the color of your wall to other palettes, then you can bring that color into your room through decorative pillows, art, or another small object.

Graphic Design USA - April 2012 - Logolounge

Graphic Design USA - April 2012 - Logolounge

Design Work Life � End of Work: Meet the Greek Identity and Interiors

Design Work Life � End of Work: Meet the Greek Identity and Interiors